Saudi Arabia’s Exploding Christmas Gifts From Hillary Clinton

As Hillary Clinton emerges as the front-runner for the Democratic
Party’s presidential candidate, she is receiving increased scrutiny for her
years as Secretary of State. Many are criticizing her hawkish foreign policy,
which is the best indication of what President Hillary’s foreign policy would
be, with many focusing on her long relationship with Saudi Arabia.

On Christmas Eve in 2011, Hillary
Clinton and her closest aides celebrated a $29.4 billion sale of over
80 F-15 fighter jets, manufactured by US-based Boeing Corporation, to Saudi
Arabia. In a chain of enthusiastic emails, an aide exclaimed that it was “not
a bad Christmas present.”

These are the very fighter jets the Saudis have been using to intervene in
the internal affairs of Yemen since March 2015. A year later, at least 2,800
Yemeni civilians have been killed, mostly by airstrikes – and there is no end
in sight. The indiscriminate Saudi strikes have killed journalists and ambulance
drivers. They have hit the Chamber of Commerce, facilities supported by Médecins
Sans Frontières (also known as Doctors Without Borders), a wedding hall, and
a center for the blind. The attacks have also targeted ancient heritage sites
in Yemen. International human rights organizations are saying that the Saudi-led
strikes on Yemen may amount to war crimes.

During her tenure as Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton made weapons transfers
to the Saudi government a “top priority,” according to a new
report published in The Intercept. While Clinton’s State Department was
deeply invested in getting weapons to Saudi Arabia, the Clinton Foundation accepted
millions of dollars in donations from both the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the
weapons manufacturer Boeing. Christmas presents were being gifted all around.

Despite the brutal attacks on Yemen and egregious domestic human rights violations,
Saudi Arabia remains the number one US ally in the Arab world. While the original
US interest was to secure Saudi’s vast oil reserves, today only 10% of oil used
in the United States now comes from the Kingdom. US dependence on Saudi oil
has been superseded by US dependence on weapons sales. The most recent
Saudi weapons deal was made in November 2015, a deal worth $1.29 billion
that included 22,000 smart and general purpose bombs, and over 5,000 Joint Direct
Attack Munitions kits to convert older bombs into precision-guided weapons using
GPS signals. The Pentagon’s Defense Security Cooperation Agency justified the
sales, saying they helped “sustain strong military-to-military relationships
between the United States and Saudi Arabia.”

It’s hard to exaggerate the enormity and high-tech nature of Saudi
weapons purchases; the sales in the decade of 2010 constitute the most enormous
military sales in history. According to a White House press
release in 2014, “The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is the largest US Foreign
Military Sales customer, with active and open cases valued at approximately
$97 billion, as Saudi forces build capabilities across the full spectrum of
regional challenges.” The weapons include F-15 bombers, Apache and Blackhawk
helicopters, missile defense systems, missiles, bombs, armored vehicles, and
related equipment and services. Weapons manufacturers such as Boeing, Raytheon,
Lockheed Martin, General Dynamics and McDonnell Douglas have been unapologetically
pushing these sales to offset military spending cuts in the United States and
Europe.

While the US government continues to provide massive amounts of weapons to
Saudi, on February 25 the European Union took the extraordinary step of voting
for an EU-wide arms embargo to Saudi Arabia; while non-binding, it
is a powerful statement that will put pressure on all European governments.
Already, government committees in England have urged Prime Minister David Cameron
to suspend arms sales to Saudi Arabia; Germany has pledged to review all future
arms sales to the Kingdom; and in Belgium the government has denied an export
license to ship weapons to the country. Canadian activists are also pressuring
their government in light of Canada’s $15 billion transaction with Riyadh for
weaponized armored vehicles, the biggest manufacturing export deal ever struck
in Canada.

US activists must follow the example of our European allies and demand
that our government stop supplying the Saudi rulers with weapons to bomb civilians
in Yemen and repress its own citizens. Join CODEPINK for the Summit
on Saudi Arabia March 5-6 to learn more and get involved. If you can’t
make it in person, watch the livestream at www.therealnews.com.